FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Dora Ricci
State Library Awards $186,000 in Grants to Preserve Library Research Materials
The New York State Library awarded $186,708 in Conservation/Preservation Program Discretionary Grants to seven collecting institutions to preserve research materials, State Education Commissioner Betty A. Rosa announced today. These competitive, merit-based grants are part of a $1.99 million comprehensive, statewide program to preserve endangered materials, such as books and public records, important to the state located in libraries, archives, museums, historical societies, and other not-for-profit cultural organizations in New York. This year’s grants include funds for preserving microfilming, conservation treatments, stabilization, protective enclosures, and re-housing.Ìý
Board of Regents Chancellor Lester W. Young, Jr. said, “Libraries and cultural institutions are vital resources for academic research, lifelong learning, and civic participation and education. These preservation grants play an integral role in helping to safeguard our most valuable and historical collections to remain available for future generations of New Yorkers to study and appreciate.â€Ìý
State Education Commissioner Betty A. Rosa said, “Without preservation efforts, many of our rare and important documents such as manuscripts, books, and research materials, would deteriorate and become unusable, resulting in the irretrievable loss of many of our most prized cultural heritage and collective knowledge. This funding is essential to ensuring that these significant historical resources remain available for the benefit of scholars, students, and the people of New York to study, cherish, and learn from.â€Ìý
The New York State Library’s Division of Library Development, part of the State Education Department, administers the , which provides State funding for libraries and other organizations engaged in efforts to preserve deteriorating library research materials. The program was established as part of the landmark 1984 library legislation and was expanded in 1986 and 1990.ÌýÌý
Grant awards for 2023 through 2024 range from $8,815 to $40,000. Grant-funded projects must be completed by June 30, 2024. The application period for next year is now open and the maximum grant award has been raised to $45,000.
Organization | Project | City | County | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
American Museum of Natural HistoryÌý |
A Hand for ScienceÌý |
New YorkÌý |
New YorkÌý |
$39,861ÌýÌý |
Buffalo & Erie Co Public LibraryÌý |
Preservation Microfilming of Buffalo & Surrounding Suburbs Phonebooks and DirectoriesÌý |
µþ³Ü´Ú´Ú²¹±ô´ÇÌý |
·¡°ù¾±±ðÌý |
$20,887ÌýÌý |
Haverstraw King's Daughters LibraryÌý |
Preservation of Rockland County Times via Microfilm ConversionÌý |
³Ò²¹°ù²Ô±ð°ù±¹¾±±ô±ô±ðÌý |
¸é´Ç³¦°ì±ô²¹²Ô»åÌý |
$16,456ÌýÌý |
Huntington Historical SocietyÌý |
Conservation of Historic Account BooksÌý |
±á³Ü²Ô³Ù¾±²Ô²µ³Ù´Ç²ÔÌý |
³§³Ü´Ú´Ú´Ç±ô°ìÌý |
$8,815ÌýÌý |
NYC Department of Records and Information ServicesÌý |
Manhattan Building Plans Preservation ProjectÌý |
New YorkÌý |
New YorkÌý |
$39,684ÌýÌý |
Metropolitan Museum of ArtÌý |
Merry Little Tales for Merry Little Hearts: British Illustrated Children's Books from the Nineteenth and Twentieth CenturyÌý |
New YorkÌý |
New YorkÌý |
$40,000ÌýÌý |
New York Botanical GardenÌý |
Early American Imprints Part 3: The Preservation of Books Published in New York StateÌý |
µþ°ù´Ç²Ô³æÌý |
µþ°ù´Ç²Ô³æÌý |
$21,005ÌýÌý |
The New York State Library’s provides financial support for projects that contribute to the preservation of significant research materials in not-for-profit libraries, archives, historical societies, and other agencies within the State of New York, whether by improving collection storage environments, reformatting or treating collections, or other preservation activities.Ìý
Since 1986, more than $14 million has been awarded through the Discretionary Grant Program to encourage the proper care and accessibility of research materials in the State, to promote the use and development of guidelines and standards for conservation/preservation practices, and to support the growth of local and cooperative preservation programs. Ìý
Visit the  for a complete list of upcoming programs, including webinars, events, and onsite genealogy walking tours. Additional programs will be added to the website as they are confirmed. If any reasonable accommodation is needed (complying with the Americans with Disabilities Act), contact the Office of Cultural Education at least one week prior to the program date by emailing NYSLTRN@nysed.gov or calling (518) 474-2274.
The New York State Library is part of the  within the Â鶹ÊÓƵ. The New York State Library celebrated its bicentennial in 2018. The Library serves three major constituencies. °Õ³ó±ð , established by law in 1818, collects, preserves, and makes available materials that support State government work.Ìý
The Library's collections, now numbering more than 20 million items, may also be used by other researchers onsite, online, and via interlibrary loan. °Õ³ó±ð  (TBBL) lends braille, audiobooks, magazines, and special playback equipment to residents of the 55 upstate counties of New York State who cannot read printed materials because of a visual or physical disability.Ìý
°Õ³ó±ð  works in partnership with 72 library systems to bring library services to millions of people who use New York's academic, public, school, and special libraries. Library Development also administers State and Federal grant programs that provide aid for library services.
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